Regional renaissance? New forms of governance in nonmetropolitan Australia


Autoria(s): Everingham, Jo-Anne; Cheshire, Lynda; Lawrence, Geoffrey
Contribuinte(s)

R.J. Bennett

J.S. Goss

A. jordan

K. Morgan

K. Mossberger

M. Rosenberg

C. Splash

Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

Since the Second World War, Australian governments have adopted various approaches to governing nonmetropolitan Australia. The authors profile three distinct approaches to governance characterised as (1) state-centred regionalism; (2) new localism; and (3) new forms of multifaceted regionalism. Although recent policy initiatives have been justified by the argument that the region is the most suitable scale for planning and development in nonmetropolitan Australia, in practice the institutional landscape is a hybrid of overlapping local, regional, and national scales of action. The authors compare this new, multifaceted, regionalism with the so-called 'new regionalism currently being promoted in Western Europe and North America. It is argued that new regionalism differs in quite important ways from the regionalism currently being fostered in Australia. In Australia, the centrality of sustainability principles, and the attempt to foster interdependence amongst stakeholders from the state, market, and civil society, have produced a layer of networked governance that is different from that overseas. It is argued that there is a triple bottom-line 'promise' in the Australian approach which differs from the Western Europe/North American model, and which has the potential to deliver enhanced economic, social, and environmental outcomes.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:80758

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Pion

Palavras-Chave #Environmental Studies #Public Administration #Development Agencies #Globalization #England #Program #370401 Urban and Regional Studies #759999 Other social development and community services #370100 Sociology
Tipo

Journal Article